Abstract
Providing for infants nutritionally via lactation is one of the
hallmarks of mammalian reproduction, and infants without motivated
mothers providing for them are unlikely to survive. Mothers must
maintain regular contact with infants both spatially and temporally
while utilising their environment to forage, avoid threats and find
shelter. However, mothers can only do this and maximise their
reproductive success with some degree of co-operation from infants,
despite their developing physical and cognitive capabilities. The
neuropeptide hormone oxytocin (OT) triggers proximity-seeking behaviour
and acts in a positive feedback loop across mother-infant bonds,
stimulating appropriate pro-social behaviour across the pair. However,
data on infant OT levels is lacking, and it is unclear how important
infants are in maintaining mother-infant associations. The bottlenose
dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) is a mammalian species that is
fully physically mobile at birth and has multi-year, but individually
variable, lactation periods. We investigated OT concentrations in
mother-infant pairs of wild individuals compared to other age and
reproductive classes. An ELISA to detect OT in dolphin plasma was
successfully validated with extracted plasma. We highlight a statistical
method for testing for parallelism that could be applied to other ELISA
validation studies. OT concentrations were consistently elevated in
calves up to at least 4 years of age with lactating mothers (12.1 ±0.9
pg/ml), while all mothers (4.5 ±0.4 pg/ml) had OT concentrations
comparable to non-lactating individuals (5.9 ±0.5 pg/ml). Concentrations
within infants were individually variable, and may reflect the strength
of the bond with their mother. The OT system likely provides a
physiological mechanism for motivating infants to perform behaviours
that prevent long-term separation from their mothers during this crucial
time in their life history. Elevated infant OT has also been linked to
energetic and developmental advantages which may lead to greater
survival rates. Environmental or anthropogenic disturbances to OT
release can occur during bond formation or can disrupt the communication
methods used to reinforce these bonds via OT elevation. Variation in OT
expression in infants, and its behavioural and physiological
consequences, may explain differences in reproductive success despite
appropriate maternal behaviour expression.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 113323 |
Journal | General and Comparative Endocrinology |
Volume | 286 |
Early online date | 13 Nov 2019 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 Jan 2020 |
Keywords
- Infant behaviour
- Maternal behaviour
- Mother-infant bonds
- Oxytocin
- Proximity seeking
- Separation